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Education Environment Social Issues

A Necessary Global Change

The Weight of Matter: Transitioning from Materialism to the Cerebral

For decades, the global standard for “success” has been measured by the accumulation of physical matter. In the “First World,” this has manifested as a relentless cycle of extraction, production, and waste. However, as our ecological boundaries reach a breaking point, it is becoming clear that the next stage of human evolution must be a pivot away from the physical and toward the cerebral. To save the environment, we must transition from a lifestyle defined by what we own to one defined by what we know, create, and experience.

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Conflict Power Social Issues

Dr. Martin Luther King Day

Each year, as we observe Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day, we do more than simply remember a man; we honor a philosophy of transformation that remains the most viable blueprint for social progress. In our current era, where tensions between government agencies like Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and immigrant rights protesters often reach a boiling point, King’s legacy offers a critical middle path. His life taught us that the pursuit of justice is most powerful when it is conducted with a disciplined commitment to peaceful assembly and a profound, mutual respect between the citizen and the state.

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Conflict Economics Health Care Social Issues

New York City Nurse Strike

In January 2026, the streets outside New York City’s most prestigious medical institutions—Mount Sinai, Montefiore, and NewYork-Presbyterian—became the front lines of a historic labor struggle. Over 15,000 nurses walked off the job, initiating the largest strike in the city’s history. While critics often point to the disruption of care as a reason to avoid such actions, the reality is that the NYC nurse strike is not merely a dispute over paychecks; it is a necessary, moral stand for the sustainability of the healthcare system and the safety of the patients within it.

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Conflict Economics Power

Tariffs and the United Nations

The Greenland Gambit: Unilateral Tariffs and the Case for Multilateral Governance

The early weeks of 2026 have witnessed a dramatic escalation in transatlantic tensions, as President Donald Trump announced sweeping tariffs on several European nations—most notably Denmark and Finland—over the ongoing Greenland dispute. Citing the need for “The Golden Dome” missile defense system and expressing concerns over Arctic security, the administration has weaponized trade policy to pressure sovereign nations into a territorial sale. While the administration frames these measures as a tool for national security and economic reciprocity, this unilateral approach highlights a growing crisis in global governance. To ensure a balanced and stable global economy, the authority to regulate international trade and impose tariffs should reside not with individual superpowers, but within a empowered multilateral framework, ideally overseen by the United Nations and its associated bodies.

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Conflict Power Social Issues

United Nations and the National Police Forces

The Case for Global Oversight: Why the UN Needs the Power to “Police the Police”

The fundamental duty of any police force is to protect and serve the citizenry. However, across the globe, we increasingly witness a disturbing inversion of this role. From the aggressive tactics of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in the United States to the systemic suppression of dissent by police in Russia, Iran, and China, law enforcement has frequently become an instrument of state-sponsored abuse rather than a guardian of public safety. Because these abuses often stem from the highest levels of national government, domestic accountability mechanisms are frequently compromised or non-existent. To protect universal human rights, the United Nations must be granted expanded authority to monitor national police forces, supported by an independent body with the mandate to “police the police.”

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Conflict Power Social Issues

Where is the Secretary General of the United Nations?

The Greenland Summit: A Failed Dialogue and a Missing Arbiter

The high-stakes meeting at the White House on January 14, 2026, between representatives from Denmark, Greenland, and the United States, was ostensibly designed to de-escalate what has become a defining geopolitical crisis of the mid-2020s. Instead, the sit-down—hosted by Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio—underscored a chilling reality: the international order is currently a theater of “might makes right,” where the sovereignty of smaller nations is treated as a line item in a real estate ledger.

President Trump’s relentless pursuit of Greenland, framed as a “national security necessity” to preempt Russian and Chinese influence, has pushed a NATO ally to the brink. While the meeting resulted in the formation of a “working group,” the fundamental disagreement remains: Washington insists on acquisition, while Copenhagen and Nuuk insist on the inviolability of borders. Yet, in this room filled with diplomats and security hawks, there was one glaring, inexcusable absence: the Secretary-General of the United Nations.

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Economics Power Social Issues

United Nations Power and Ambition

The Case for a Resurgent United Nations: Toward a Global Mandate

For eight decades, the United Nations has functioned primarily as a “watering hole” for diplomats—a place to air grievances and manage crises through the lens of national interest. However, as the challenges of the 21st century—from climate collapse to unregulated AI—transcend every border, the traditional model of a passive UN is increasingly obsolete. To ensure human survival, the United Nations must transition from a mediator of states to a champion of humanity. This requires a radical shift: the UN must advocate for its own empowerment aggressively, pursue independent financial sovereignty, and speak directly to the eight billion people it serves.

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Conflict Power Social Issues

Greenland and an Official UN Statement

The question of Greenland’s sovereignty has emerged as a critical flashpoint in international relations. As of early 2026, renewed pressure from the United States to acquire the territory—ranging from economic threats to the refusal to rule out military force—has created a diplomatic crisis within NATO and the United Nations.

To uphold the core principles of the UN Charter, the international community must take two decisive steps: first, a formal condemnation of any attempt by a foreign power to unilaterally annex or purchase Greenland; and second, a recommendation for Greenland’s full independence to finalize its long-standing journey toward self-determination.

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Conflict Power Social Issues

UN Resolve and Action is Required in the Iranian Crisis

The Iranian Crisis: A Mandate for Multilateral Action

The dawn of 2026 has found Iran at a critical crossroads. Since late December 2025, a wave of civil and political unrest has swept through all 31 provinces, ignited by a collapsing economy and record inflation, but rapidly evolving into a fundamental challenge to the legitimacy of the Islamic Republic. As security forces—including the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)—deploy lethal force, the international community faces a familiar dilemma. However, the historical record suggests that the solution does not lie in the unilateral intervention of the United States. Instead, the current crisis presents a unique and necessary opportunity for the United Nations to assert its authority, enforce its Charter, and facilitate a transition from an autocratic theocracy to a productive, democratic socialist society.

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Economics Power Social Issues

UN Secretary General and the Universality of Law

The Global Leviathan: A Unified Vision for Equality

The modern world is defined by a deep, structural asymmetry. On one side, the “First World” offers some labor protections, civil liberties, and economic stability; on the other, the “Third World” often struggles with systemic exploitation and legal volatility. This disparity is the primary engine of global migration. However, if a supreme world government existed—an authority capable of enforcing uniform labor and civil rights laws across every square inch of the planet—the desperate need for mass emigration would evaporate.